Obama approval soars to 50 percent on jobs figures

WASHINGTON — Boosted by rising US jobs figures, President Barack Obama’s approval rating has hit the magical 50-percent mark and he has opened up a double-digit lead over his likely Republican opponent in November, a poll showed Monday.

The poll by the Washington Post and ABC television found Obama reaching the 50 percent barrier — seen as a critical threshold for an incumbent seeking reelection — for the first time since Osama bin Laden was killed last May.

Pollsters said Obama’s ascent comes as the US economic recovery appears to be finally taking hold, with voters appearing more confident and comfortable with his policies.

The latest US figures released last week found that the unemployment rate has fallen to 8.3 percent, the fifth straight monthly decline since August, when it was 9.1 percent.

The US president now holds a solid 11 percentage point lead over the frontrunner for the Republican nomination, Mitt Romney, in a hypothetical general election matchup, according to the survey.

Obama leads Romney 52 to 43 percent among all Americans, and a narrower 51 to 45 percent among registered voters — his first time topping 50 percent in a head-to-head matchup with Romney since July, the pollsters said.

But the president still has substantial work to do: Among the all-important independent voters likely to determine the outcome of the election, 47 percent approve and 50 percent disapprove of the way he is handling his job.

His approval numbers are much better than they had been a few months ago however — they had been as low as 34 percent among swing voters.

As the Republican nomination battle grows more bitter and divisive, the public’s view of Romney, seen as the clear frontrunner after back-to-back wins in Florida and Nevada, has soured, the poll found.

Fifty-five percent of those who are closely following the campaign said they disapprove of what the Republican candidates have been saying.

Romney, a former Massachusetts governor and multimillionaire venture capitalist, appears to have been hurt by negative assaults launched by his rivals for the nomination, in particular former House speaker Newt Gingrich.

By more than two to one, respondents said the more they learn about Romney, the less they like him, while 57 percent of those polled said they approved of most of what Obama’s laid out in last month’s State of the Union speech.

The poll of 1,000 adults and 879 registered voters was conducted between February 1 to 4 and has a margin of error of plus or minus four percentage points.